Transform your Long Island home with our custom sunrooms, liferooms, pergolas, and more! Quality Designs That Improve Your Space And Lifestyle.
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You’re not adding a sunroom just to increase square footage. You want a space that works when it’s 95 degrees outside and the humidity makes your back patio unbearable by 10 a.m.
That means glass that blocks heat without blocking light. Ventilation that actually moves air. Insulation that keeps your energy bill from spiking every time you turn on the AC. Most sunrooms in Baytown either turn into saunas by June or require a dedicated HVAC unit just to stay livable.
The difference is in the materials. CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT handles UV rays and thermal load better than standard glass, which means you’re not sitting in a greenhouse. You’re sitting in a room that feels like the rest of your home, just with better views and more natural light. It’s designed for Houston’s climate, not some generic build that works fine in Colorado but fails here.
This is the space where you’ll have coffee in the morning, let the kids play without worrying about heat stroke, and host dinners in January without needing a patio heater. It’s not a seasonal add-on. It’s a year-round extension of how you live.
We’ve been building sunrooms for nearly 50 years. We’re not a general contractor who dabbles in sunrooms when someone asks. This is what we do, and we’ve spent decades figuring out what works in climates like Baytown’s.
Houston homeowners know outdoor living spaces are only as good as their ability to handle the weather. You’ve seen covered patios that trap heat, screen rooms that let in too much moisture, and cheap glass rooms that crack under temperature swings. We’ve seen it too, which is why our installations use tempered safety glass that’s four times stronger than standard options and engineered specifically for high heat and humidity.
Every sunroom installation is handled by trained builders who know the difference between a structure that looks good in photos and one that actually performs when you’re three months into summer. You’re working with a local sunroom company that understands what Baytown homeowners are up against, because we’ve been solving these problems in the Houston area for years.
First, we come to your home and look at the space. Not just measurements, but how the sun hits your property, where drainage goes, what your foundation can support, and how the new structure ties into your existing roofline. This isn’t a one-size-fits-all process.
Then we design the sunroom around how you’ll actually use it. If you want it climate-controlled year-round, we’re specifying insulated walls and HVAC integration. If you want maximum airflow for spring and fall, we’re planning operable windows and ventilation. The design phase is where we make sure you’re getting a functional space, not just a pretty rendering.
Once the design is locked in, we handle permits and scheduling. Construction timelines vary based on size and complexity, but most sunroom builds take a few weeks from groundbreaking to final walkthrough. Our team manages the foundation work, framing, glass installation, electrical, and finishing details.
You’ll see progress daily, and we keep the site clean and secure. When we’re done, you’re not dealing with punch lists or callbacks. The room is finished, sealed, and ready to use the day we hand it over. We don’t leave until you’re comfortable with every detail, because that’s how this is supposed to work.
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Every sunroom we build in Baytown includes CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT with stay-clean technology, which means less maintenance and better energy performance. This isn’t builder-grade glass. It’s engineered to reduce heat transfer, block UV damage to your furniture, and stay clearer longer without constant cleaning.
The framing is aluminum or vinyl depending on your preference and budget, but either way it’s built to handle Houston’s humidity without warping, rotting, or requiring regular maintenance like wood does. We’re not using materials that look great for two years and then start falling apart when the weather turns.
Baytown homeowners are also dealing with the reality that summer temps are climbing. We’re projected to see nearly 50 days over 97 degrees per year by 2050, compared to just seven days back in 1990. That’s not fear-mongering, that’s climate data. Which means your sunroom needs to be built for the Houston of today and tomorrow, not the one from 30 years ago.
You’ll also get a 100% satisfaction guarantee and the backing of a company that’s been in this industry for decades. We’re fully licensed and insured, and we offer flexible financing options up to $125,000 if you’d rather spread out the investment. This is a real addition to your home with real ROI, typically recovering 50-70% of the cost when you sell.
Most custom sunroom installations in the Baytown and Houston area run between $22,000 and $75,000, with the average landing around $47,000. That breaks down to roughly $150 to $300 per square foot depending on size, materials, and whether you’re adding HVAC or electrical.
The range is wide because the details matter. A three-season screen room with basic ventilation costs less than a fully insulated four-season sunroom with climate control and premium glass. If you’re tying into your home’s existing HVAC system, that’s additional work. If you want custom finishes, built-in lighting, or a more complex roofline, that affects the price too.
What most people don’t realize is that sunrooms offer a strong return on investment. You’re looking at roughly 50-70% ROI when you sell, which is on the higher end for home additions. In nearby markets like College Station and Bryan, homes with quality four-season sunrooms are selling for $18,000 to $35,000 more than comparable homes without them. So yes, it’s an investment upfront, but it’s one that pays you back both in daily use and resale value.
Yes, but only if it’s built correctly. Houston’s humidity is the real challenge, not just the heat. Temperatures above 90 degrees are common for three-fourths of the year here, and the felt temperature regularly exceeds 100 except in late fall and winter. A poorly designed sunroom becomes unusable by mid-morning in the summer.
The key is using glass that’s designed for thermal performance, not just visibility. CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT blocks heat transfer and UV rays while still letting in natural light, which keeps the space cooler without making it dark. Pair that with proper insulation in the walls and roof, plus ventilation or HVAC integration, and you’ve got a room that stays comfortable even when it’s blazing outside.
We’ve been installing sunrooms in the Houston area long enough to know what fails. Single-pane glass, poor sealing, inadequate airflow—those are the mistakes that turn sunrooms into expensive mistakes. When the build is done right, you’re looking at a space you can use in July just as comfortably as you use it in December. That’s the whole point of a four-season sunroom.
Most sunroom construction projects take between three and six weeks from the day we break ground to the day you’re using the space. That timeline depends on the size of the room, the complexity of the design, and whether we’re dealing with any site-specific challenges like drainage, foundation work, or utility relocation.
Smaller three-season sunrooms on existing concrete slabs can go faster. Larger four-season builds with full HVAC integration, custom electrical, and more complex rooflines take longer. Permitting timelines in Baytown can also add a week or two on the front end, but we handle that process so you’re not chasing down approvals.
Once we start, you’ll see steady progress. Foundation and framing happen first, then glass installation, then interior finishes and electrical. We don’t drag projects out or leave your home exposed for weeks at a time. Our crews show up on schedule, keep the site clean, and move efficiently through each phase. When we say three to six weeks, that’s a realistic window, not a best-case scenario that never actually happens.
A three-season sunroom is built for spring, summer, and fall. It’s insulated and sealed better than a screen room, but it’s not designed to be climate-controlled year-round. You’ll get good ventilation, protection from bugs and rain, and a comfortable space most of the year, but it’s not heated or cooled like the rest of your home.
A four-season sunroom is a full extension of your living space. It’s insulated to the same standards as your house, tied into your HVAC system, and built with glass and materials that handle extreme temperatures. You can use it in January when it’s 40 degrees outside and in July when it’s 98. It’s not a seasonal add-on, it’s a permanent room.
In Baytown, most homeowners go with four-season builds because Houston’s weather is unpredictable and the heat lasts longer than three seasons anyway. You’re already paying for the foundation, framing, and glass—adding insulation and HVAC integration upfront costs more, but it gives you a space that works every single day of the year. If you’re going to invest in a sunroom, you might as well make it one you’ll actually use in August.
Yes. Any permanent structure that’s attached to your home and adds square footage requires a building permit in Baytown. That includes sunrooms, even if they’re not fully climate-controlled. The permit process ensures the build meets local codes for structural integrity, electrical work, and foundation requirements.
We handle the permitting process as part of the project. That means pulling the necessary permits, submitting plans to the city, and coordinating inspections at the right stages of construction. You’re not filling out paperwork or waiting in line at the permit office. We do that because we’ve done it hundreds of times and know exactly what Baytown requires.
Skipping permits might seem like a shortcut, but it creates problems when you sell. Buyers’ inspectors will flag unpermitted additions, which can kill deals or force you to rip out the work and start over. It also voids your homeowner’s insurance if something goes wrong. Doing it right the first time costs a little more upfront and saves you a lot of headaches later. We’re licensed, insured, and fully compliant with Texas construction regulations, so you’re covered from day one.
Yes. Sunrooms typically return 50-70% of their cost when you sell, which is strong compared to most home improvement projects. In nearby Texas markets like College Station and Bryan, homes with quality four-season sunrooms are selling for $18,000 to $35,000 more than comparable homes without them.
The ROI depends on the quality of the build and how well the sunroom integrates with the rest of your home. A professionally installed four-season sunroom with premium glass, proper insulation, and clean finishes adds real value. A cheap screen room or poorly built addition doesn’t move the needle as much because buyers see it as a project they’ll need to fix or replace.
Beyond resale value, there’s the daily value of actually using the space. You’re adding square footage that works for family gatherings, home offices, workout areas, or just a place to drink coffee without dealing with mosquitoes and heat. Most Baytown homeowners who install sunrooms aren’t doing it purely for ROI—they’re doing it because they want more usable space and outdoor living is a huge part of life in Houston. The fact that it also increases your home’s value is a bonus, not the only reason to do it.
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